Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
BANNER-HERALD
SPORTS
808 OLIVER, SPORTS EDITOR
Campanella Stars
In 13-12 Vietory
. A new idol appears to have
of the Flatbush faithful to fil
parture of Dixie Walker and
" The latest favorite is Roy
Campanella, a rookie negro'
catcher whose brilliant *~work |
over the weekend both at l)atl
and in the field has left the im- |
sression he might be the long |
g:?l hitter the Brooklyn Dodgersl
nave been searching for.
Yesterday the 26-year old
wer hitter smashed two home.
ns-and a single to lead the
rooks to a 13-12 triumph over‘
e Giants. Each of his circuit
lows came with a man on base.
is second round tripper _was
hit in the ninth to put the
Dodgers within one run of the
Giants and set the stage for
Brooklyn's final two runs,
driven in by Pete Reiser’s single
with the bases loaded.
5 Heavy Fireworks
! The heaviest fourth of July
fireworks was supplied in Bos
‘u’n where the Red Sox blasted
8 record-tying 14 runs in one
inning to overcome the Phila-
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GUNNS
By The Associated Press
. won his way into the hearts
| the void created by the de-
Eddie Stanky. |
delphia Athletics, 19-5. The Red
Sox amassed 20 hits, but the
amazing thing was that the
mighty Ted Williams was .the
only batter to fair te connect
for ‘at least one safety. He re
ceived three walks, but did not
get a hit in three official times
at bat.
The New York Yankees and
Chicago Cubs are the only other
clubs since 1900 to have scored
14 runs in a single snning.
The Yankees moved within a
half game of the second place
Athletics and one of the Ameri
can league leading Cleveland
Indians by defeating the Wash
ington Senators 6-5. |
The scheduled Cleveland-St..
Louis doubleheader was post
poned by rain. ‘
The White Sox came roaring
back to humble the Tigers, 12-1,
in the segond game of a Chica
‘go twin bill after Detroit had
'won the cpener, 6-3. The White
| Sox cellected 18 hits for 33 bases
in the nightcap.
l The National league leading
| Braves were handed a double
| setback by the Phillies' in Phi
ladelphia, 7-2 and 5-2.
The double victory enabled
the Phils to move past the Giants
into the first division.
Pirates Win Two
The Pittsburgh Pirates smack
ed the Chicago Cubs twice, 5-1
and 6-2, behind a pair of veteran
righthanders, Rip Sewell and
Elmer Riddle. The twin triumph
pushed the second place Pirates
within two and a half "games of
the braves.
I Hank Sauer cracked his 23rd
and 24th home runs as the Cin
cinnati Reds divided a double
header with the St. Louis Cardi
nals.
Ewell Blackwell gained his
‘fifth triumph for the Reds in the
opener 8-6.
Harry (the cat) Bretheen end
|ed the Cards’ losing streak, hold
ing the Reds to seven hits in the
nightcap for an 8-1 triumph.
The first application of poison
in controlling boll weevils should
be made 20 days after the first
blooms appear.
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Eight major league clubs sought
Johnny Antonelli but the
Braves landed the 17-year-old
Rocheste: southpaw for a re
ported $55,000. He pitched a
no-hit, no-run game in a spec
jal exhibition arranged for
major league scouts, i)
Glen Arven
(;oes Into
Final Round
THOMASVILLE, Ga, July 5
—(AP)—Frank Mulherin of Au
gusfa and Press Thornton of
Dothan, Ala., meet today in the
final round of the Glen Arven
Invitational golf tournament.
| Thornton went into the finals
| yesterday when he beat last
lycm"s defending champion, Billy
! Goodloe, jr., of Valdosta, 5 and
| ¢, Mujherin took Bill Flowers of
|Thomasville, 5 and 4.
In third round play yester
'da'_y morning Goodloe defeated
Ramsey Pidcock of Moultrie, 4
and 3, while Thornton beat Sam
Lippett of Albany, 5 and 4.
“Mulherin was 5 and 4 over
Larry Robetrtson of Jacksonville,
Fla, and Flowers won T-up on
the 19th hole in his play with
lßill Rambo of Columbus.
a 3
|_Leaders |
S American League
Batting—Williams Boston, .397;
Boudreau, Cleveland .375.
Runs Batted In — Di Maggio,
New York and Williams, Boston
70.
Runs — Williams, Boston 63;
Di Maggio, Boston 53.
Hits — Williams, Boston 95;
Boudreau, Cleveland and Zaril
-la, St Louis 19. :
Triples — Di Maggio, New
York 9; Platt, St Louis and Yost,
Washington 7.
Home Runs—Di Maggio, New
York 18; Keltner Cleveland 17.
Stolen Bases—Coan, Washing
ton 12; Dillinger, St. Louis 9.
Strikeouts— Lemon, Cleveland
72; Feller, Cleveland and New
houser, Detroit 69.
Pitching— Fowler Philadelphia
6-1, .857; Muncrief Cleveland 5-
1883,
National League
Batting — Musial, St. Louis,
.406; Ashburn, Philadelphia .355.
Runs Batted In— Sauer, Cin
cinnati 63; Musial St. Louis 58.
Runs — Musial, «St. Louis 5§9;
Kiner, Pittsburgh 54.
Hits—Musial, St. Louis 108;
Ashburn, Philadelphia 97.
Doubles— Dennis Philadelphia
19; Russell, Boston, Robinson,
Brooklyn, and Marshall, New
York 1.
Triples—Musial St. Louis and
Hopp, Pittsburgh 9.
Home Runs—Sauer, Cincinna
ti 24; Kiner, Pittsburgh 20.
Stolen Bases—Ashburn, Phil
adelphia 20; 'Torgeson, Boston
THE BANNER-IERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
School Boys
To Be Top
Golfers Soon
SAN FRANCISCO, July 5 —
(AP)—College golf has wrapped
up its 51st national champion
ls_hip Among the crack field that
trod the Stanford course last
week may have been future win
ners of the U. 8. Amateur and
possibly the Open title.
The collegians have scaled the
National Amateur and Open
heights before. Not many have
had the time, or money, to con
tinue golf on a high competitive
plane as an avocation after stu
dent days. A few have gone in
for the sport on a professional
basis.
But from National Collegiate
tournament victories have gone
on to win the U. S. Amateur
such stars as H. Chandler Egan
of Harvard; Jess Sweetser of
Yale; George Diunlap of Krffcaw
ton and John Fischer of Michi
gan. A
Went To Emory
The great Bobby Jones attend
ed Emory college but hunted
bigger game than collegiate golf.
He won the U. S. Open four
times and the Amateur five.
In the profesional competition
for a livelihood, Lawson Little
has been the most successful
among the former college men.
At Stanford University Little’s
participation in golf was incon
sequential but he won the U. S.
and British Amateur crowns
twice in succession and bagged
the National Open in 1940.
Observers at the National Col
legiate tournament, concluded
S:flurda\v, were impressed by the
possibilities of many of the con
testants.
Bow Harris, who won the
individual title and helped his
San Jose State College win the
‘team championship, has bagged
‘many juglor and other tourna
‘ments in these parts He's 19, and
for a teen-ager, plays his shots
with the skill that makes pro
instructors nod with approval.
The San Jose lad barely
squeezed out a win over Ed
Hopkins, jr., of the University of
Texas in a 36-hole thriller.
VFEW Faces
Silvey
On Ag Hill
The Athens V. F. W., a mem-~
ber of the Independent Baseball
League, and a semi-pro outfit—
Silvey Motors — battled out on
Ag Hill this afternoon in a ben
efit #ame for Lee Sheridan.
It will be the first meeting
between these clubs this season,
so the outcome is very uncertain.
The game was to have started
at'4:}§ and some 2,000 fans were
expected for the tilf.
~ All proceeds will go to Clarke
county’s legless World War II
hero.
Cops, Mayor
Bump Delco
A combination of the Athens
Police Force and the Mayor
proved a little too strong for the
Delco “Gals” Saturday night
and turned up the victors,
something like 7-1. No official
book was kept on the contest,
so the actual score was just as
much a “mystery” as the “Cops
‘n’ Mayor” aggregation was un
}il the game started.
Allen Hansford pitched for
the City officials and kept the
“Gals” guessing. Luenell Carnes
turned in an admirable job of
pitching herself, considering the
opponents, but the visitors were
just naturally out to win and hit
her offerings pretty freely. Pat
Messer, Martha Elder, Mildred
Nix, Fran Booth, and others
were outstanding for the Delco
“Gals” in their loss.
Strikeouts— Branca, Brooklyn
81; Jansen, New York 68.
Pitching—Poat, New York 7-1,
876; Brecheen, St. Louis and
Riddle, Pittsburgh 9-3, .750.
A single train long enough to
carry a year’s output of coal in
the United States would stretch
six times around the earth.
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Princetor pulled the first upset in the opening race of the firs\*® qualifying heats of the Olympic trials, defeating Yale by six inches, Six
cight-oared crews broke the 2000-meter record of Washington’s 1936 Olympic champions by as much as eight-and-two-fifths seconds for
Princeton’s Lake Carnegie course. The previous record was six minutes four and eight-tenths seconds. Princeton was timed in 6:01.2,
& Yale in 6:02.5, but Cornell was fastest of all spilling Harvard in 5:56.4.
snffi"’m NGS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L JCT.
Cleveland 41 24 .631
Philadelphia 43 28 .606
New York &l 47 608
Boston 33 32 .508
Detroit a 2 38 4N
Washington 31 -37 .456
St. Louis 25 40 .386
Chicago 21 48 - 328
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Boston 40 29 .580
Pittsburgh 36 80 -.b45
St. Louis 9 3L SR
Philadelphia 36 35 - .007
New York 83,33 00
Brooklyn 29 35 .453
Cincinnati 31 38 .449
Chicago ; 29 39 .426
SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION
W L PCT.
Nashville 51 28 .646
Mobile 47 31 .603
Memphis 43 30 o)
Birmingham &1 9 has
Atlanta 36 45 444
New Orleans 83 45 423
Little Rock™ 32 45 416
Chattanooga 32 49 .395
YESTERDAY’S RESULTS
American League
New York 6, Washington 5.
Boston 19, Philadelphia 5.
Detroit 6-1, Chicago 3-12.
Cleveland at St. Louis (2) post
poned—rain.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Brooklyn 13, New York 12.
Pittsburgh 5-6, Chicago 1-2.
Cincinnati 8-1, St. Louis 6-8.
Philadelphia 7-5, Boston 2-2,
SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION
Birmingham 3-5, Atlanta 0-0.
Little Rock 3-1, Memphis 7-3.
Chattanooga 4-6, Nashville 21-5.
Mobile 11-3, New Orleans 6-3,
(2nd. tie, Darkness).
TODAY’S SCHEDULE
National League
Boston at New York (2).
Brooklyn at Philadelphia (2).
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh (2).
Chicago at St. Louis (2).
{ American League
New York at Boston (2).
Philadelphia at Washington (2)
Detroit at Cleveland (2).
St. Louis at Chicago (2).
SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION
(Night)
Birmingham at Atlanta (2).
Little Rock at Memphis (2).
Chattanooga at Nashville (2).
Mobile at New Orleans (2).
q
Yesterday's
—Stars—
ROY CAMPANELLA, DOD
GERS—Slammed two homers and
a single as the Dodgers nipped
the Giants, 13-12. Each of his
homers came with a man on
base.
ELMER RIDDLE, PIRATES—
Permitted the cubs only four hits
to Register his ninth victory as
the Pirates swept both ends of a
double header from Chicago 5-1
and 6-2.
FINE
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THIS NAME PETROLEUM JELLY,
~asra% 'Dhoto-Finish—in Crew ~
Ben Hogan,
Harrison
Play Off Tie
DETROIT, July 5. — (AP) —
Wee Ben Hogan. the little guy
with the big golf game, stepped
farther ahezd in the PGA money
parade today as he tied into E.
J. ‘Dutch) Harrison, the ambling
Arkansan, in an 18-hole playoff
for the Motor City Open Golf
championship.
Hogan closed with his second
straight 66, five shots under par,
to - overhaul the 38-year-oid
Harrison on the last leg of the
72-hole holiday show yesterday.
They - finished with identical
four-day tot‘als o« 275, nine
strokes under ‘par for the 6,616~
yard Meadowbrook Country Club
course where par is 35-36—71.
$2.600 First Morey
Today'’s plavoll = (1. ..p.. m,
EST), was for the $2,600 win
ner’s share of $15,000 in prize
money and the $1,900 award to
the runner-up.
Hogan, who entered the tour
nament leading 1948 money 'win
ners with $17,597.50, needed to
beat Dutch to climb over the
$20,000 mark for the year.
Harrison, ninth on the money
list with $7,409.17 when he ar
rived here, climbed ahead of
Clayton Heafner into eighth
place regardless of the outcome
of the piayoff.
Among 13 players who better
ed par of 284 for the four days
was Southern Amateur Gene
Dahlbender, - 24-year-old Atlan
tan.
FIRST IN EASTERN
WILKES-BARRE, Pa., July 5
—(AP)—Fred Thomas, 23-year
old negro outtielder banged out
two hits in eight time at bat,
stole a base and drove in a run
yesterday as the first member
of his race to play in the Class
A Eastern League.
Thomas attended assumption
college at Windsor, Ontario, and
served three years with the Roy
al Canadian Air Force.
Freshie
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RADIO-CLEGE K
WG AU -CBS
MONWAY RVENING
6:oo—Eric Severeid and News
(CBS).
6:ls—The Lone Ranger.
6:4s—Lowell Thomas and News
4 (CBS). ¢ ¥
7:oo—Robert Q: Lewis Show
(CBR)Y% 4
7:3o—The Jerry Wayne Show
(CBS).
7:4s—Ned Calmer & News
(CBS).
B:oo—lnner Sanctum (CBS).
B:3o—Cabin 13 (CBS).
8:55—Bill Henry and News
(CBS).
\):oo—My Favorijte Husband
(CBS).
9:3o—The Amazing Mr, Tutt
CBB):
10:00—My Friend Irma (CBS).
10:30—Screen Guild Players
(CBS).
11:00—Georgia News.
11:05—Dancing in the Dark.
12:00—News.
12:05—Sign Off.
TUESDAY MORNING
6:ss—News.
7:00—Good Morning Circle,
7:ss—Georgia News.
B:oo—Morning News Roundup
(CBS).
B:ls—The Music Shop (CBS)
B:3o—Music Shop Parade.
9:oo—Morning News (CBS).
9:ls—Barnyard Follies (CBS).
10:00—Music for You (CBS).
10:30—Salute to Music.
10:45—Mid-Morning News.
11:00—Arthur Godfrey (CBS).
11:30—Information on Seocial
Security.
12:00—Wendy Warren and News
(CBS).
TUESDAY AFTERNOON
12:15—Hillbilly Maitnee.
1:00—Big Sister (CBS).
I:ls—Ma Perkins (CBS).
I:3o—Young Dr. Malone (CBS).
I:4s—The Guiding Light (CBS).
2:oo—Guest Star.
9:ls—Perry Mason (CBS).
92:30—This Is Nora Drake
e I
& ALY
MONDAY, JULY 5, 1048,
(CBS)
2:4s—Romance of Evelyn Wine
ters: ((CBS).
3:2s—News.
3:30—1340 Platter Party,
4:oo—Hint Hunt (CBS).
4:2S—CBS News.
4:3o—Get Acquainted Hour,
4:ss—The Georgia Story
(five minute program),
S:OO—W. C. T, U.
s:ls—Here’s to Veterans,
s:3o—Sports rarade,
s:4s—Lum ’'n Abner (CBS).
‘WRFC PROGRAM
+ TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1948,
s:s9—Sign On.
6:oo—Reveille Round-Up.
6:25—U. P. News.
6:3o—Reveille Round-Up.
7:OO—U. P. News.
7:o6—Baseball Scores,
7:lo—Market Summary.
7:ls—Johnny Murray.
7:4s—U.P..News.
B:oo—Johnny Murray.
B:55—U. P. News.
9:oo—Morning Devotional,
9:3o—Echoes From Broadway
10:00—Words and Music.
10:1i5—You Can’t Say Hello,
10:30—Novelty Tune Time.
10:45—Perry Como.
11:00—~Chuck Wagon.
12:00——Dixie Follies.
12:15—U. P. News.
12:30—Farm News and Music.
1:00—U. P. News.
I:os—That Man With The Band.
I:3o—Luncheon Serenade.
2:OO—U. P, News.
2:o6—Show Tune Time.
215—Vocal Varieties.
2:4s—Strike Up The Band.
3:oo—Murray-Go-Round.
4:OO—U. P. News.
4:os—Murray-Go-Round,
6:oo—Tomorrow’s.
6:ls—Sports Round-Up.
6:30--Candlelight and Silver.
7:OO—U. P. News.
7:os—Twilight Time.
7:2s——U. Py News.
7:3o—Songs By Vic Damone.
7:4s—Sign Off.